. Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York. asally,pale orange distally. Coxae and femora basally pale orange, thedistal portion of femora fuscous; tibiae pale straw, tinged withcarmine; tarsi light brown; claws slender, evenly curved; ovipositorshort, the lobes sublanceolate, acute. Type Cecid. 514. Dicrodiplosis longicomis n. sp. This midge was taken in a trap lantern at Nassau, N. Y., July 9,1906. Female. Length inm. Antennae nearly as long as the body,thickly haired, dark brown, yellowish basally; 14 segments, the fifthwith a stem three-
. Report of the State Entomologist on injurious and other insects of the state of New York. asally,pale orange distally. Coxae and femora basally pale orange, thedistal portion of femora fuscous; tibiae pale straw, tinged withcarmine; tarsi light brown; claws slender, evenly curved; ovipositorshort, the lobes sublanceolate, acute. Type Cecid. 514. Dicrodiplosis longicomis n. sp. This midge was taken in a trap lantern at Nassau, N. Y., July 9,1906. Female. Length inm. Antennae nearly as long as the body,thickly haired, dark brown, yellowish basally; 14 segments, the fifthwith a stem three-fourths the length of the cylindric basal enlarge- REPORT OF THE STATE ENTOMOLOGIST ICJiy 157 ment, which latter has a length two and one-half times its diam-eter. Palpi; first segment subquadrate, the second nearly twice thelength of the first, the third and fourth, each longer than the ]:»reced-ing, subequal. Alesonotum light fuscous yellowish, the posteriormedian area and submedian lines yellowish. Scutellum and post-scutellum fuscous yellowish. Abdomen fuscous yellowish, the dorsal. Fig. 59 Dicrodiplosis1 o n g i c o r n i s, fifth antennalsegment of female (enlarged,original) sclerites well separated, dark yellowish. Ovipositor yellowishorange. Wings narrow, costa light brown. Halteres pale yellowish,fuscous apicaily. Coxae yellowish; femora and tibiae fuscous straw,tarsi pale yellowish straw, the distal segments tinged with carmme;claws long, strongly curved, the pulvilli about half the length ofthe claws. Ovipositor about one-half the length of the abdomen,the terminal lobes narrowly lanceolate. Type Cecid. 534- Dicrodiplosis borealis Felt 1907 Felt, E. P. N. Y. State Mus. Bui. no, p. 113-14; separate, p. 17(Rhabdophaga) This dark carmine species was taken on spruce, Picea, at LakeClear, N. Y., June 7, 1906. Female. Length mm. Antennae nearly as long as the body,sparsely haired, light brown, the fifth antennal segment with a stemone-half the length of the cylindric
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectinsects, bookyear1882